Abstract

The histological development of the quail oviduct and the changes in concentrations of progesterone receptor, ovalbumin, conalbumin, ovomucoid and ovoglycocomponents are analyzed during the period spanning 7-35 days of age. The initiation of luminal epithelial cell proliferation is the first event of magnum growth. The epithelial cells begin to evaginate into subepithelial stroma and form tubular glands. Meanwhile, luminal epithelium starts cellular pleomorphism through ciliogenesis. No egg white proteins are detectable in the developing glands; at the same time, the concentration of the progesterone receptor increases from about 5500 sites/cell to 30,300 sites/cell. Tubular gland cells then begin to synthetize and accumulate egg white proteins, mucous cells differentiate in the luminal epithelium, and the cell proliferation decreases and finally stops. Compared with earlier studies dealing with the blood levels of estrogen and progesterone in developing quails during the same period, and the cellular changes induced in the oviducts of ovariectomized and ovariectomized-hypophysectomized quail by exogenous steroids, these results distinguish between the cellular responses that are physiologically controlled by estradiol and other responses that have multihormonal regulation.

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